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Mussolini's Italy occupied Albania in April 1939, and established a collaborationist regime with the apparent enthusiasm of most Albanians.[1] After Hitler invaded and occupied Yugoslavia in spring 1941, the bulk of the Serbian province of Kosovo-Metohija was placed under Italian-Albanian collaborationist control and annexed to Albania.[2]
When Italian forces moved into Kosovo they were accompanied by Albanians from Albania. Albanians living in Kosovo joined the invasion force as it made its way North and East, and also ambushed Yugoslav Army units moving to meet the invaders. These Albanians, natives of both Albania and Kosovo, instituted a campaign of murder and expulsion of Serbs. Initially, the mayhem was carried out by disorganized kachak (irregular) units. These were Albanian brigands from both sides of the border who had fought Yugoslavia throughout the 1920s and 1930s.[3] However, soon a native Kosovo militia was formed. This militia, called the Vulnetari, and various gendarme units, began more systematic persecution.[4] ================================================== Italian Fascists Taken Aback
================================================== Because of manpower limitations and the de facto alliance between Albanians and the Axis powers, these efforts at restraint were limited. Nevertheless, the Italian occupiers reported their disgust at Albanians actions to the authorities in Rome. The Italian army reported that Albanians were "hunting down Serbs," and that the "Serbian minority are living in conditions that are truly disgraceful, constantly harassed by the brutality of the Albanians, who are whipping up racial hatred."[7] Carlo Umiltā described some of the atrocities in his memoirs and observed that "the Albanians are out to exterminate the Slavs."[8] German diplomat Hermann Neubacher, the Third Reichs representative for southeastern Europe reported that: "Shiptars [i.e., Kosovo Albanians] were in a hurry to expel as many Serbs as possible from the country."[9] The atrocities were deliberate, part of a plan to create a Serb-free "Greater Albania." In June 1942 the fascist puppet president of Albania, Mustafa Kroja, declared his goals candidly before his followers in Kosovo:
Similarly, Kosovo Albanian leader Ferat-bey Draga, said that the "time has come to exterminate the Serbs [...] there will be no Serbs under the Kosovo sun."[11] The anti-Serb pogroms intensified after Italy's collapse in September 1943. The German Nazi's assumed control of Albania, including Kosovo. Italian military units pulled out and were replaced by three divisions of the German XXI Mountain Corps. The German presence gave the Albanians a free hand. Kosovo Albanian nationalist militias called the Balli Kombëtar (or Ballistas) carried out a campaign of deportation and murder of Serbs in 1943 and 1944. Then, on Hitler’s express order, the Germans formed the 21st Waffen-Gebirgsdivision der SS - the Skanderbeg Division. With German leaders and Kosovo Albanian officers and troops, Hitlers aimed to use the Skanderberg Division to "achieve its [i.e., Germany's] well-known political objective" of creating a "Greater Albania" including Kosovo, minus Jews, Serbs and Romany. [12] In general, German policy was to organize volunteer military units among Nazi sympathizers in occupied countries. Of all the occupied nations only the Serbs, Greeks and Poles refused to form Nazi volunteer units. Rather than joining the Nazis, as the Albanians in Kosovo did, the Serbs organized the largest anti-Nazi resistance in Europe. Both the Communist Partisans and the Royalist Chetniks were mainly Serbs and both groups fought the Germans and their local allies throughout Yugoslavia. The Germans recruited the 9,000 man Skanderbeg division to fight these resistance groups. But the Skanderberg's Albanians had little interest in going up against soldiers; they mainly wanted to terrorize local Serbs, "Gypsies" and Jews. Many of these Kosovo Albanians had seen prior service in the Bosnian Muslim and Croatian SS divisions which were notorious for slaughtering civilians. What explained this passionate hatred for non-Albanians? A big factor was militant Islam. The Fundamentalist "Second League of Prizren" was created in September 1943 by Xhafer Deva, a Kosovo Albanian, to work with the German authorities. The League proclaimed a jihad (holy war) against Slavs. They were backed by the Grand Mufti of Jerusalem, Haj Amin al Husseini, who was a leading Nazi, pressed for Hitler's 'Final Solution,' and had Hitler's approval to lead the murdering of all Middle Eastern Jews, once the time was ripe [13]. Albanian religious intolerance was shown by their targeting Serbian Orthodox churches and monasteries for destruction.[14] No one is certain of the exact extent of human destruction suffered in Fascist-occupied Kosovo. Estimates range from 10,000 to 30,000 Serbs murdered. At least 100,000 were driven from Kosovo and replaced with "immigrants" from Albania.[15] In justifying current Kosovo Albanian demands to secede from Serbia, the media has repeated, like a mantra: 90% of the population is Albanian. While this figure is most likely exaggerated (nobody knows for sure because Kosovo Albanians boycotted the census for years) the province has been largely Albanian. But a major cause of the current demographic imbalance was the Albanians' success as Hitler's willing executioners during World War II.[16] And their attention was not limited to Serbs. Unknown numbers of Romany ("Gypsies") were liquidated. And Kosovo Albanians, acting alone as well as under German direction, eliminated many of Kosovo's Jews. The definitive work on Hitler's "Final Solution" in Yugoslavia [17] estimates that 550 Jews lived in Kosovo when Hitler took over Yugoslavia. 210 of them, or 38 percent, were murdered in Kosovo, mainly by Albanians. In fact, the Skanderbeg division's first operation was to act as an Einsatzgruppe [18] against the Jews, and its second was a similar extermination foray against the Serb village of Velika where more than 400 Serbians were murdered. [19] Ceda Prlincevic, head of the Jewish community in Pristina and an executive of the provincial archives, has explained to Emperor's Clothes that the Jews who were not murdered outright were sent by the Skanderbeg division to the German death camps Treblinka and Bergen-Belsen. One train, on its way to the latter camp, took the wrong track and was intercepted by advancing Russian soldiers. According to Mr. Prlincevic, were it not for that fortunate detour, the entire Jewish population of Kosovo would have been eliminated. [20] Although KLA supporters now claim that no Jews were killed in Kosovo and that Jews were sheltered by the Kosovo Albanians, such claims are false and should be treated the same way we would treat other Holocaust denials. ================================================== Albanian Fascists Go on Fighting ================================================== The Germans surrendered in 1945, but the remnants of the Kosovo Albanian Nazi and fascist groups continued fighting the Yugoslav government for six years, with a major rebellion from 1945 to 1948 in the Drenica region. (Drenica was the hotbed for KLA recruiting in 1998-99). That rebellion was under the command of Shabhan Paluzha; it is called the Shabhan Paluzha rebellion. Sporadic violence continued until 1951. It is literally true to say that the last shots of World War II were fired in Kosovo. ================================================== Parting Thought ================================================== This past summer, as Germans entered Prizren in Kosovo for the first time since World War II, an NBC correspondent reported:
============================================== Footnotes ============================================== [1] Professor Nikalaos A. Stavrou, KFOR: Repeating History, The Washington Times, 11 August 11 1999. [2] Hugo Wolf, Kosovo Origins (1996), Chapter 10. Portions of northern Kosovo, from Mitrovica to the provincial border with Serbia, were administered by Germany from the outset, primarily to exploit the mines in the area. An eastern sliver of Kosovo was ceded to Bulgaria. [3] Dr. Smilja Avramov, Genocide in Yugoslavia, Part 2, Chapter 5, "Genocide in Kosovo and Metohija" (1995): "The crimes were begun by the kachak guerrilla detachments which had been sent into Kosovo from Albania, but members of the Shqiptar minority quickly joined in. Judging from Italian reports, at first the situation resembled more the marauding of bandits than a deliberate policy." [4] Dr. Dusan Batakovic, The Kosovo Chronicles (1992); Avramov, supra. [5] Dr. Smilja Avramov, supra. [6] Carlo Umiltā, Jugoslavia e Albania. Memorie di un diplomatico (1947), in Avramov, supra, note 141. [7] Dr. Smilja Avramov, supra, note 117. [8] Carlo Umiltā, Jugoslavia e Albania. Memorie di un diplomatico (1947), in Avramov, supra, note 137. [9] Hermann Neubacher, Sonderauftrag Südost (1953), quoted in Dr. Slavenko Terzic, Old Serbia and Albanians. [10] Dr. Slavenko Terzic, Kosovo, Serbian Issue and the Greater Albania Project. [11] Batakovic, supra, citing H. Bajrami, Izvestaj Konstantina Plavsica Tasi Dinicu, ministru unutrasnjih poslova u Nedicevoj vladi oktobra 1943, o kosovsko-mitrovackanm srezu, Godisnjak arhiva Kosova XIV-XV (1978-1979) at 313. [12] Avramov, supra, note 151. [13] On the role of Haji Amin al Husseini as a leading Nazi, see the following documents:
[14] Avramov, supra, note 148, citing Bishop Atanisije Jevtic, From Kosovo to Jadovno. [15] Batakovic gives a conservative estimate of 10,000 dead while Dr. Slavenko Terzic cites a contemporary American intelligence report that 10,000 died in the first year of occupation alone. Terzic, supra, citing Serge Krizman, Maps of Yugoslavia at War (1943). In addition, an unknown number of Serbs died in the German-operated work camps of Pristina and Mitrovica, or were killed by the Germans as reprisals against resistance activity. The reported number of expelled Serbs also varies depending on the source. Dragnich and Todorovich cited the figure of 70,000-100,000, based on a review of wartime refugee records. Dmitri Bogdanovich estimates 100,000, but acknowledges that the exact number has never been determined [Dmitri Bogdanovich, The Kosovo Question: Past and Present (1985)]. Dr. Avramov notes that wartime records showing 70,000 refugees from Kosovo counted only those persons in need of government assistance who registered with the Commissariat for Refugees in Belgrade. Records of those who did not register, or who fled to Montenegro, apparently do not exist. Avramov, supra. [16] Before World War II Serbs constituted a slight majority of the Kosovo population (Avramov, supra). In addition to the murder and expulsion of Serbs, the relative ethnic population balance was further skewed by the entrance of hundreds of thousands of ethnic Albanians from Albania proper during the war. Relying on Italian records from the time, Dr. Avramov estimates that 150,000 to 200,000 Albanians moved into Kosovo between 1941 and 1943.
[17]
The Crimes of Fascist
Occupants and Their Collaborators Against the Jews of
Yugoslavia (1952, revised 1957), published by The Federation of Jewish Communities of
Yugoslavia. ============================================== Donate to Emperor's Clothes ============================================== We need a little help from our friends...
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